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RADIO tWMFD Wibninftoa 1400 KC FRIDAY, AUGUST 6 ? :30—Family Altar — Rev. J. A. Sul livan. 7 ;45—Red. White and Blue Network Program. 8:00—Daily War Journal with Martin Agronsky. 8:15—Musical Clock. g:00—The Breakfast Club with Don McNeil. 10:00—Lest We Forget. 10:15—Roy Porter, News. 10:30—Home Demonstration Club. 10:35—Let’s Dance. 10:55—U. P. News. 11:00—Breakfast at Sardi’s. 11:30—Dan Gardiner, News. 11:45—Living Should Be Fun. 12:00—The Supreme Stewardship. 12:15—Meet Your Neighbor — Alma Kitchell. 12:30—National Farm and Home Hour. 1:00—Baukhage. 1:15—Your Gospel Singer — Edward MacHugh. 1:30—Rest Hour. 1:40—NEWS — WILMINGTON STAR NEWS. 1 :43—U. P. News. 2:00—Meditation Period. 2:15—The Mystery Chef. 2:30—Ladies Be Seated. 3:00—Songs by Morton Downey. 3:15—My True Story. 3:45—Between the Bookends with Tel Malone. 4:00—Blue Frolics. 4:30—Time Views the New*. 4:45—1The Sea Hound. 5 :00—Hop Harrigan. 5:15—U. P. News. 5:30—Lone Ranger. 6:00—Terry and the Pirates. 6:15—Capt. Tim Healey — Spy Stories. 6:30—Ten, Two Four Ranch Party. 6 :45—Sports. . _ 6:55—NEW’S — WILMINGTON STAR NEW'S. 7:00—Health Talk. 7:05—Let’s Dance. g:00—Watch the World Go By — Earl Godwin. 0:15—The Parker Family. 8:30—Meet Your Navy. 9:00—Treasury Star Parade. 9:15—Baptist Training Union. 9 30—Victory Parade of Spetlight Bands 9:55—Harry Wismer — Sports Commen tary. 10:00—U. P. News. 10:15—Lulu and Johnny. 10:30—U. P. News. 10 :35—Korn Kobtalers. 10:43—To Be Announced. FRIDAY, AUGUST 6 Eastern War Time P. M.—Subtract One Hour for CWT., 2 Hrs. for MWT. (Changes in programs as listed due to corrections by networks -made too late to incorporate.) 5:13—Portia Faces Life. Drama — nbc Dick Tracy. Detective Serial — blu Mother and Dad Serial Series — cbs Black Hood, Dramatic Serial — mbs 5:50—Just Plain Bill, Dramatic — nbc The Jack Armstrong Serial — blu-east Chicago's Singing Strings — blu-west Are You a Genius? Quiz — cbs-basic Chick Carter. Detective Serial — mbs 5;-15—Front Page Farrell Serial — nbc Archie Andrews. Kiddies Serial — blu Keep the Home Fires Burning — cbs Serial Series for Kiddies — mbs-basic 6:00—News; Hollywood Orchest. — nbc Children's Dramatic Skit, Daily — blu Quincy Howe and News Time — cbs Prayer; Comments on the War — mbs 6:15—Melodic Strings by Orches. — nbc j. ) Br Announced (15 minutes.' — blu Golden Gate Quartet, Songs — cbs Dancing Music Orchestra Tune — mbs 6 u—Nan Merriman Songs, Ore. — nbc Jack Armstrong in repeat — blu-west J ri Sullavan & Her Song Show — cbs War Overseas. Commentators — mbs 6:' 1—Bob Stanton's Sports Time — nbc Lowell Thomas on News — blu-basic World News and Commentary — cbs P neat of Kiddies Serial — other mbs 7:00—Fred Waring’s Time — nbc-basic isiiudos Amigos. Music Variety — blu “I Love a Mystery,” Dramatic — cbs Fulton Lewis Jr.. Comment — mbs 7:13—World War via Broadcast — nbc Bex Stout, Our Secret Weapon — cbs To Johnson Family, a Serial — mbs 7:30—Tropicana Out of Chicago — nbc L > .? Ranger Diama of the West — blu Easy Aces. Drama Series — cbs-basic Olga Coelho with Songs — cbs-Dixie Navy, School of Music Series — mbs 7: Xaltenborn and Comment — nbc Mr. Keen, Persons Tracer — cbs-basic Harmonies on Keyboard — cbs-Dixie B:CO—Lucille Manners, Dr. Black — nbc News Broadcast Time, Daily — blu Corliss Archer, Dramatic Show — cbs Cal Tinney Comments on War — mbs 8:13—The Parker Family Drama — blu Dancing Music Orches. Period — mbs 8 30—All-Time Hit Parade Tunes — nbc Meet Your Navy, Great Lakes — blu Adventures of Thin Man, Drama — cbs Sherlock Holmes & Dr. Watson — mbs 8:35—Five Minute News Period — cbs Don Dunphy and Sports Quips — mbs 9:00— Abe Lyman’s Waltz Time — nbc Gang Busters’ Anti-Crime Play — blu Friday Night’s Playhouse — cbs-basic DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS l.Joke® 5. Partly open ». Kind of beer 10. Rascal 12. Irate 13. Bird’s wing 14. Flat.-topped hill 15. Look askance 16. Dental filling 20 Fuel 23. Rowing ! implement 24. Prefix to SCOt.cn names 27. Fruit 29. To train 31. Melody 32. Unhappy 33. Like a fabric 35. Lariat 36. Perceive 37. Turkish officer 39. Soak flax 40. Struck 42. Days gone by 45. Boss of a shield ' 49. Soothe 51. Any araceous plant 52. Reproductive body of plants 53. Oath 54. Observes 55. Setf DOWN 1. Girl’s name 2. Ova 3. Caravansary 4. Attempt 5. Constellation 6. Merry 7. Chills and fever 8. A law 9. Escape 11. Organ of hearing 17. Not (prefix! 18. Music note 19. Portion of curved line 20. Transparent substance 21. Eagle’s nest 22. Facial expression 24. Cheek bone 25. Keen 26. Defraud 28. Kind of tree 30. Jap sash 34. Sweet potato 35. Rodent 38. Depart 40. Gaze at 41. Southeast wind 42 Dance step 43. Swiss mountains 44. Astringent fruit 46. Break of day (poet.) 47. Cold wind 8-4 Yesterday’* Aaswer 48. Poem 50. Affirmative reply G 51. Highest card .. ...... .... .... CRYPTOQUOTE—A cryptogram quotation TORV LVC NVFGC LKGV QGKL QKKNR SJFC QKKNR QGKL TORV. LVC-MFSK. _ * Crvptoquote: HE WHO HAS FELT NOTHING not raow tow to learn anything-roosseau. . DWtributri by *>** FbbturM Syyd.t»t«, I«e. W CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE When Dr. Bennet told Karen, after they had left the sick-room, that he thought Buffy had been badly frightened in some way, she assured him that was impossible. She told the doctor about Buffy, explaining that he had been fright ened in an air raid and had had a long sea voyage that must have been something of an ordeal to such a small child alone, and of course he still was very high strung, but she had taken every possible precaution, realizing all this, to protect Buffy from fear of any kind. “Couldn't it be his reaction from all that he has gone through?” she asked. Of course she was relieved that Buffy had not caught any thing and that he no doubt would be quite all right by morning, as : the doctor had assured her, but j this was bad enough. “possibly,” Dr. Bennet agreed, I “although there must have been ! some one thing to bring it to a head. There’s a mild sedative in the medicine I left. It will break up the fever, too. I’m confident the boy will be all right by morn ing, but please call me again. And it would be a good idea to try to find out if anything has disturbed him.” Karen said she would do the best she could. Of course she could not question Buffy until morning. He was sleeping soundly notv, peacefully, thank goodness, but she would keep watch in case he should wake and need her. She did not see what possibly could have happened to have frightened him so badly as to make him really ill. but he was such a bun dle of nerves and of repression, too. Dr. Bennet had said if she could get the boy to tell her what it had been that just the telling probably would undo whatever damage had been done by erasing the fear. That would be Paul phoning again. Karen thought, when old Jan said she was wanted on the telephone. He had said he would be anxious to/know about Buffy. It was Paul; she told him what Dr. Bennet had said. Paul seemed to think it a bit absurd, although he did not use those words. He said: “I’ll bet you'll still find that the kid’s picked up something. The temperature would indicate that. How could he get worked up to 103 degrees over something that was only in his mind? But since Dr. Bennet assures you he’ll be okay by morning I’d just forget it, darling.” His tone still was cheerfully re assuring. but Karen could not for get anything that had upset Buffy Gabriel Heatter and Comment — mbs 9:15—Dancing Music Orchestra — mbs 9:30—People Are Funny, a Quiz — nbc Spotlight Bands, Guest Orchest. — blu That Brewster Boy, Dramatic — cbs Double or Nothing, Quiz Show — mbs 9:55—Harry Wismer Sports Time — blu 10:00—Tommy Riggs & Betty Lou — nbc John Vandercook Commentary — blu Bob Hawk and His Quiz Show — cbs John B. Hughes War Comment — mbs 10:15—Lulu and Johnny, Songs. — blu Dancing Music Orches. Period — mbs 10:30—Bill Stern Sports & Guests — nbc Alec Templeton; Korn Kobblers — blu The Three Sisters, Vocalization — cbs Paul Schubert’s War Analysis — mbs 10:45—To Be Announced (15 m.) — nbc To Be Announced (15 mins.) — blu Bill Henry in Commentary — cbs Dancing Music Orches. Tunes — mbs 11:00—News for 15 Minutes — nbc-east The Fred Waring- repeata — nbc-west News, Variety & Dance — blu & cbs Comment, Music, Dance (3 hr.) — mbs 11:15—Late Variety with News — nbc that quickly. She explained that Dr. Bennet said a child, especially one as high-strung as Buffy, could run a fever without infection. For some reason, as she said this an other thought came into her mind. She remembered Paul’s saying that sometimes it was good for a boy to have to do the things he did not want to do. Could Paul possibly have . . . but no, he wouldn’t . . not when Karen had cautioned him so, warned him against frightening Buffy in that particular way. “What did you two do today?” She put the question in an ordi nary tone, although since it fol lowed those thoughts it was unex pectedly important. Paul said, “Why. didn't Buffy tel! you?” She said that there had not been time. “You didn’t do anything, go anywhere too exciting, did you?” She was tense now, waiting for Paul's answer. It meant so much to her; it was almost unthinkable that it possibly could be the one that had leaped to her mind. But it was. Paul’s laugh came back to her, off-hand, casual, as Was his tone in answering w'hat seemed so incredible to her. “Why, we went upstairs—the kid and I. But don’t get any foolish notion into your head, Karen, that had anything to do with this little up set. I still feel you’ll find it’s a germ or too much rich dessert. We lunched first, you know, and now that I think of it, he did have a big chocolate eclair, and gob bled every bite. He enjoyed the flight, too. We just took a turn over the town and a look down at the ocean. We thought it would be a nice surprise for you to know Buffy had been up. He agreed with that beforehand. He wanted to go.” “But I asked you not to take him up.” Karen wondered how she could keep her voice on such a cool level, when she was so horribly upset, so thoroughly pro voked — no. more than that so cruelly disappointed in Paul. She was not convinced, either, by his line of persuasion that Buffy had been a willing victim. She recalled too well those sobs only a day ago, caused when a plane had flown high overhead in a serene sky. Euffy had said then that he could r.ot tell her why he was crying. Could it be that Paul had been working on the boy, planning this surprise, and warning him to keep it from Karen? But that WAS unthinkable. "1 know you did. dear. But you make too much of some things, you don’t understand boys . . . ycu admit that, yourself.” Paul’s blight .one still continued. “No use pampering a kid in that kind of thing You’ve got to break it.” “I’m sorry,’ Karen interrupted, “but I don’t agree with you on that.” She was sure that Dr. Ben DEPENDABLE! BY MARIAN MARTIN “Give me a good, dependable two-piecer I cAn slip into jiffy quick . ; . for town, for Red Cross for church.” Marian Martin Pattern 9369 is your ideal choice! You can make it in no time, too. Note how simply cut, how easy to fit! Pattern 9369 may be.ordered only in misses’ and women’s sizes 12, 14, 16, 18. 20; 30, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40 and 42. Size 16 requires 3 1-8 yards 35-inch; gilet, 5-8 yard contrast. Send sixteen cents in coins for this Marian Martin pattern. Write plainly size, name, address, style number. Ten cents more and the Marian Martin Pattern Book is yours! Smart hand bag pattern printed right in the book. Send your order to Tjte Wilming ton Morning Star. Pattern Depart ment. 232 West 18th St„ New York, 11. N. Y, ret would not. eitner. Or even Faul, could he have seen Buffy, lying near delirium, long shudders shaking his frail body. You could rot “break” a child, as you would a colt. She knew that much about boys. “I had talked about going up with Buffy only yesterday. He said he would go, but he said he wanted me to be with him the first time. I promised I would—” “Oh, then YOU are the one who is jealous now!” There was re lief in Paul’s cheerfulness at this. “We put one over on you then, darling.” “I’m afraid you don’t under stand,” Karen said. That remain ed. the incredible part, that Paul should fail all around, first with Buffy, now with her, in under standing. “That isn’t it at all.” “I’m diraid you are making too much of the whole thing.” Paul sounded a bit impatient at last, ior after all, hadn’t he told Karen that the boy had been perfectly willing to go. to have the surprise of telling Karen that he had con quered his fear and been up in a plane? It was difficult to make her see it over the wire. “Suppose I run over, darling, and we can—” ‘Not tonight.” Karen did not make much attempt to control her feelings now She felt a hard, oright anger against Paul. She supposed it would die down, bit not now, with Buffy lying so piti fully silent, drugged into sleep, up stars. Not until she made very ftiing all right again with the child. “I promised Buffy I would be there in case he wakened.” “I see.” Paul’s tone was brisk; he might have known she would put the boy before him. Well, she might oe sorry, foi Paul was an gry and hurt now, too. He only had wanted to help, do his part With the child, for Karen was cer tainly unreasonable when it came to her nephew . . . not very under standing now, when it came to h.mself. “I’li drop over tomorrow then—if I may?” For of course oy then Karen would see she had teen wrong in putting any blame or his shoulders. He still felt cer tain the kid was coming down with something, and it was ridicu lous for them to have even a slight misunderstanding over such a trivial matter. “All light, ’ Karen said. She did not want to feel this way toward Paul, or to hold such feelings. They had never come even tms rear to a quarrel, if this could be called that now. It was worse than a quarrel, since it went so much deeper. Down to the funda mentals of agreement, of fairness. She felt almost as if she did not know Paul at all, when she kr.ew him so very well and so long. But how could he have done such a thing deliberately disre garding how she felt, all she had said, her wisnes—taking Buffy up in a plane when he had said he would not uniil Karen felt it was all right? How could Paul feel it bad been, with the evidence of ihe child’s reaction in a physical illness from that mental ordeal so unnecessarily inflicted, so unkind? And she had haa such high hopes ihat this day together would be the beginning of a real friend ship. of brotherhood between the little Doy and the man she was going to marry. She had entrusted the child to Paul’s care with such lull confidence. She had blamed herself for seeping them apart with her own selfish love. Because there was so much in volved, she felt it deeply. It was so much more than that Paul had taken Buffy up in his plane. It would ail have to be straightened out, not onlv with the little boy. as Dr. Bennet had said it could be, but with Karen, too. (To Be Continued) -V Wilmington Man Will Head Suburban School Wallace West, native of Wil mington, has been elected to the principalship of Bradley’s Creek school, succeeding J. W. Webster who will enter the armed services on August 12, H. M. Roland, su perintendent of schools, announced Thursday. Mr. West graduated from New Hanover High school, attended Wake Forest College, and taught for three years in Columbia, Tyr rell county; for the past two years he has served as principal in that county. Mr. Roland reported that several vacancies remain to be filled here. -V CHILD SUCCUMBS EUGENE. Ore., Aug. 5.—(/P)—A child died today and 17 persons were brought to hospitals suffer ing from what Dr. C. L. Lindgren, Lane county health officer, termed poisoning from eating cream-based pies. 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A GAS-^ TOnV.GHT ? / — >E w'-ro SIHCE HE Y/tHEN’RE STEPPING Jf ARODUO H-Re ■ GRADUATED FROM. \ OUT TO THE \( LOHS.tSE ROMPERS'—SOT ) 6ENAERKL STORE \\ SCARECROW THE MA.tSOR HFS A — LOOKS UHE ) / V^ILL r HWPHOTIZED HIM {( S r^EMl CHPkPTER. A/ DEHAN-DiNG . IMTO LESrOlHG ) ( OF THE OVOLS / \ A YKO-\V-c vV'' CATER tt^3 ^ tVICEYlNC. T. M. REG. U. 5. PAT. Cff- __—